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CTA Why ?.

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Presentation on theme: "CTA Why ?."— Presentation transcript:

1 CTA Why ?

2 Where do we aim ?

3 The Cherenkov Telescope Array facility
aims to explore the sky in the 10 GeV to 100 TeV energy range builds on demonstrated technologies combines guaranteed science with significant discovery potential is a cornerstone towards a multi-messenger exploration of the nonthermal universe

4 Possible CTA sensitivity
GLAST Crab E.F(>E) [TeV/cm2s] 10% Crab MAGIC AGN and pulsar physics H.E.S.S. Exploring the cutoff regime in Galactic sources 1% Crab A deep look at the TeV sky

5 4 x 4 degr. field SNR models using DAV 94 n = 1 e = 0.1 (consistent with HESS plane scan) assuming 1 mCrab sensitivity

6 How will we do it?

7 Sensitivity Minimal detectable flux per band Dlog10E=0.2, relative to a power-law Crab spectrum Threshold limit from event count, ~ 1/T.A limit from proton bg, ~ 1/q (h.T.A)1/2 limit from syst. error on background, indep. of T,A; ~1/q2 limit from electron bg, ~ 1/q (T.A)1/2

8 Ideal energy-dependent resolution & rejection

9 Ideal energy-dependent resolution & rejection

10 Possible CTA sensitivity
~3000 m2 mirror area ~5000 m2 mirror area ~4000 m2 mirror area x 1.5 GLAST Crab E.F(>E) [TeV/cm2s] 10% Crab MAGIC few 104 m2 with dense coverage (5-10%) H.E.S.S. O(107 m2) with low coverage ( %) 1% Crab few 105 m2 with medium coverage (1-2%)

11 Option: Mix of telescope types Not to scale !

12 CTA as an observatory CTA will be a normal astrophysical observatory, open to the community, with professional operators, AOs, support for data analysis etc. Data will be public after some time (1 y?) Significant guaranteed time (~50%) for construction consortium CTA will most likely combine HEP and astrophysics worlds Observatory operation Significant contribution to construction by institute shops to reduce required investment

13 Getting on (the European) track

14

15 Baseline given in ESFRI LoI

16

17 The EC/ESFRI route CAPACITIES Work programme –
New research infrastructures Design studies (29 M€) Construction - Preparatory phase (63 M€) Infrastructure construction

18 Research Infrastructures in FP7
Robert-Jan Smits DG Research European Commission

19 FP7 Research Infrastructures in brief
Existing Infrastructures New Infrastructures Integrating activities Design studies Construction (preparatory phase; construction phase) ESFRI Roadmap e-infrastructures Policy Development and Programme Implementation

20 Total operational budget 1630 M€
Planning of calls and indicative budget Total operational budget 1630 M€ Call Call Call Call Integrating activities 275 x e-Infrastructures 89 115 Design studies 35 Construction – Support to the Preparatory Phase 135 Construction – Support to the Implementation Phase RSFF (200 M€) M€ Policy Development and Programme Implementation 25 5 Total per call (M€) 284 395

21 World wide context CTA as European Initiative
Close cooperation with Japan & US very desirable Joint technology development or Joint project could help to fund 2nd site Near future: concentrate on FP7 / EC aspects

22 Possible Schedule 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Site exploration
FP 7 Design Study Prep. Phase ? 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 Site exploration Array layout Telescope design Component prototypes Array prototype Array construction Partial operation GLAST “Letter of Intent” (100 pages, physics + conceptual design) Proposal Design Report Products of Design Study

23 Stages Letter of Intent (spring 07) Proposal (summer/fall 08)
Establishs physics case Discusses basic performance needs Lists possible sites and key characteristics Gives examples for array configurations Gives options for technical implementation Lists areas where further design is needed Proposal (summer/fall 08) Re-iterates physics case Gives detailed performances for (few) array layouts Gives details for (few) implementation options More on site options, organization options Gives cost estimates Design report (fall 09) Final Array layout Telescope implementation choices and details List of final few candidates sites {not clear if final site choice} Proposal for organization, governance, operation

24 What should we have after design study
Detailed knowledge of characteristics, availability of (few) good site candidates Array layout which optimizes physics performance for a given cost (and which is about 1 order of magnitude better than what we have now) Detailed design and (industrial) cost estimates for telescopes and associated equipment Plan how to organize, produce, install, commission, operate the facility; estimate for operating cost Model and prototype how to handle and analyze the data Small prototype series of components such as mirrors (~100), photosensors and electronics (~ channels), probably a few drive systems, possible a secondary mirror, … to ensure that production issues and costs are understood

25 Design study structures in Work Packages
WP1 Management of the design study WP2 Astrophysics and astroparticle physics WP3 Optimization of array layout, performance studies and analysis algorithms WP4 Site selection and site infrastructure WP5 Telescope optics and mirror WP6 Telescope structure, drive, control WP7 Photon detectors and focal plane WP8 Readout electronics and trigger WP9 Instrument calibration and analysis algorithms {merge with WP10?} WP10 Atmospheric monitoring and associated science WP11 Observatory operation and access (TOC + SOC) WP12 Data handling, data processing, data management and data access (SDC) WP13 Risk assessment and quality assurance, production planning (?) WP14 Resource exploration

26 The challenge - putting the puzzle together

27 Grand Challenge I Find (and agree on) an array layout that has the required performance

28 Camera field of view Effective field of view for given camera diameter
5o: Easy 7o: Probably doable 10o: Brick wall Large homogeneous fov minimizes systematics improves high-energy coverage Best for Galaxy: 7o-9o Best for AGN: small fov

29 Quantity versus quality (versus R&D time)
V. Vassiliev et al., astro-ph/ 40000 Pixels in camera for 10o fov

30 Grand Challenge II: Cost and Funding
~3000 m2 mirror area ~5000 m2 mirror area ~4000 m2 mirror area x 1.5 GLAST Crab E.F(>E) [TeV/cm2s] 10% Crab MAGIC few 104 m2 with dense coverage (5-10%) H.E.S.S. O(107 m2) with low coverage ( %) 1% Crab few 105 m2 with medium coverage (1-2%)

31 Grand Challenge II: Cost and Funding
500 1000 1500 2000 200 400 600 800 1.000 1.200 Cost per 100 m 2 Mirror area (m ) 12000 m2 x 1.2 M€/100 m2 = 144 M€ x 1.5

32 Grand Challenge II: Cost and III: Reliability
Reduce cost per area Can spent a lot on design, if savings in production cost result Exploit mass production to reduce cost Reliability Current telescopes (e.g. H.E.S.S.) have not reached the reliability required for such a large system Telescope (drives, end switches, …) Camera Software & control Design needs to be optimized for high reliability To limit operating and maintenance costs To maximize uptime To mimimize systematic errors

33 Grand Challenge IV: Coordination
Site Array Physics area, height telescope types, size, fov telescope cost trigger options environmental conditions Telescope Photon detectors Optical layout and mirror facets weight fov Electronics Structure Camera Mount & dish

34 Grand Challenge V: Production
C TA An advanced facility for ground-based high-energy gamma ray astronomy

35 Grand Challenge VI: Organization
Legal form of the CTA observatory New (European?) entity ? Part of existing (European?) organization ? CERN ESO Operated by existing national organization ? DESY Saclay Rutherford other National Labs Site decision will be influenced by Choice of host organization Contribution by host country or (transnational) host region

36 What if … we don’t get the design study? continue CTA design
little change in work programme, but missing funds will slow things down apply 2010 for Construction – Preparatory Phase we cannot reach the performance goals within reasonable costs? we cannot agree on a layout & technology?


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